Not here for it. Jackie Goldschneider and Margaret Josephs opened up about their “disappointment” with Jennifer Aydin for throwing a drink at Melissa Gorga and Joe Gorga.
09.10.2022 - 12:25 / foxnews.com
Georgia Libertarian Shane Hazel, running to be the state's next governor, said he wants to be an alternative to the Republican and Democratic options on the ballot in November's election. Hazel, a podcast host and frequent guest on FOX Business, is challenging incumbent Republican Gov. Brian Kemp and Democrat Stacey Abrams in Georgia's gubernatorial election, which is only a month away.
"I think Georgia needs another choice," Hazel told FOX 5 Atlanta. "We've got a Republican and a Democrat and what we've seen over the years is more and more government invasion into our lives." The small government Libertarian first ran for public office as a Republican in 2018, when he went up against incumbent U.S. Rep.
Robb Woodall in the 7th Congressional District. Woodall ended up winning the GOP primary with about 72% of the vote. Georgia Libertarian Shane Hazel, running to be the state's next governor, said he wants to be an alternative to the Republican and Democrat options on the ballot in November's election.
(FOX 5 Atlanta) In 2020, Hazel ran as a Libertarian for the first time when he campaigned for U.S. Senate against then-incumbent Republican David Perdue and Democrat Jon Ossoff. A candidate in Georgia must receive 50% plus one vote to win an election outright.
Perdue had received the most votes in the November 2020 election, but failed to reach 50% in part due to Hazel's 115,039 votes, or 2.32%, in that race, forcing a January runoff in which Ossoff came out the victor. Hazel could potentially force a runoff again in November as recent polling has Kemp narrowly reaching the 50% mark. A Fox News poll from September had Kemp with 50%, compared to Abrams' 43%.
Not here for it. Jackie Goldschneider and Margaret Josephs opened up about their “disappointment” with Jennifer Aydin for throwing a drink at Melissa Gorga and Joe Gorga.
Sharing his thoughts. Joe Giudice weighed in on ex-wife Teresa Giudice‘s ongoing feud with brother Joe Gorga after the duo traded barbs at BravoCon.
Her side of the story. Real Housewives of New Jersey star Melissa Gorga detailed what went down when her costar Jennifer Aydin threw a drink at her and husband Joe Gorga during BravoCon.
Oprah Winfrey is the latest big name to join Stacey Abrams on the campaign trail. Winfrey will host a virtual event with the Democratic Georgia gubernatorial nominee titled "A Thriving Life!" on Thursday night. "I’m excited to join an extraordinary storyteller and my friend,@Oprah, for a conversation about this historic election, the #UnfinishedBusiness we have here in Georgia, and how we can write the next greatest chapter in our state's history," Abrams, 48, wrote on Twitter.
A cast divided. While filming season 13 of The Real Housewives of New Jersey, things quickly took a turn when Teresa Giudice had another rift with Melissa Gorga and Joe Gorga.
She’s Team Teresa. The Real Housewives of New Jersey‘s Jennifer Aydin seemingly threw a drink at Joe Gorga during BravoCon 2022 on Sunday, October 16.
Following her lead. The Real Housewives of New Jersey‘s Melissa Gorga said Teresa Giudice was the one who fanned the flames of their feud, leading to her sister-in-law and brother Joe Gorga skipping her August wedding.
A heartbreaking change. Amid Teresa Giudice and brother Joe Gorga’s feud, the Standing Strong author was overcome with emotions when she found out her little brother would not attend her wedding to Luis “Louie” Ruelas.
Former President Barack Obama is traveling to Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin this month to stump for Democratic candidates weeks before the midterm elections. First, on Oct. 28, he heads to Atlanta, where Stacey Abrams is making another gubernatorial run against incumbent rival Gov.
Staying civil. Teresa Giudice’s eldest daughter, Gia Giudice, revealed how she’s handling her mom’s feud with uncle Joe Gorga and his wife, Melissa Gorga.
ATLANTA – Stacey Abrams is blasting Republican Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp for enticing increased Chinese investment in the state despite what she says is the greater threat to national security it could bring, as well as the potential surveillance of Georgians by the Chinese Communist Party.
ATLANTA – Democratic Georgia gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams is pushing back on the recent criticism she's faced on the campaign trail regarding her stance on abortion, as well as previous comments surrounding the results of the 2018 gubernatorial election that she lost to incumbent Republican Gov. Brian Kemp.
With less than four weeks to go until November’s elections, Gov. Greg Abbott is maintaining his upper-single digit lead over Democratic challenger Beto O’Rourke as the Republican governor runs for a third four-year term steering Texas.
Oregon GOP gubernatorial candidate Christine Drazan said her Democratic candidate makes decision that are "politically driven" and not what's best for Oregonians on "The Ingraham Angle." You know, this is a continuation of Tina Kotec's failed leadership, she is out of touch with Oregonians, she is making choices and making decisions that are just politically driven, the reality on the ground is that drugs harm families. And drugs are hurting our state, they are hurting our community, and frankly as you noted, people are dying.The answer here is not to continue to enable this behavior, the answer is to get people into treatment and long-term recovery and not to assume that this is how our state has to be long-term, and therefore we need to create meth stabilization centers, that is the wrong answer.
After an Obama-appointed federal judge upheld a new Georgia election law against a challenge from Stacey Abrams, a top civil rights attorney told Fox News the Peach State's Democratic gubernatorial nominee continues to use an outdated political "playbook" to claim injustice. In an interview with Shannon Bream on "Fox News Sunday," Abrams said voter suppression purportedly still exists in municipalities where it people may have "difficulty registering" or where voter rolls may be subject to dormancy purges. "In the state of Georgia, we adequately proved and more and more voters have experienced difficulties with doing so," Abrams said.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott criticized New York City Mayor Eric Adams over the ticketing of buses carrying migrants from his state to the so-called sanctuary city, following a state of emergency declaration in the Big Apple amid the influx.
New York GOP candidate for governor Rep. Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y. said that the crime crisis in New York is hitting "close to home" after two people were shot just outside his house on Sunday afternoon.